Self-renewable human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) serve as a potential unlimited ex vivo source of human cardiomyocytes (CMs) for cell-based disease modeling and therapies. Although recent advances in directed differentiation protocols have enabled more efficient derivation of hPSC-derived CMs with an efficiency of ∼50%-80% CMs and a final yield of ∼1-20 CMs per starting undifferentiated hPSC, these protocols are often not readily transferrable across lines without first optimizing multiple parameters. Further, the resultant populations are undefined for chamber specificity or heterogeneous containing mixtures of atrial, ventricular (V), and pacemaker derivatives. Here we report a highly cost-effective and reproducibly efficient system for deriving hPSC-ventricular cardiomyocytes (VCMs) from all five human embryonic stem cell (HES2, H7, and H9) and human induced PSC (hiPSC) (reprogrammed from human adult peripheral blood CD34(+) cells using nonintegrating episomal vectors) lines tested. Cardiogenic embryoid bodies could be formed by the sequential addition of BMP4, Rho kinase inhibitor, activin-A, and IWR-1. Spontaneously contracting clusters appeared as early as day 8. At day 16, up to 95% of cells were cTnT(+). Of which, 93%, 94%, 100%, 92%, and 92% of cardiac derivatives from HES2, H7, H9, and two iPSC lines, respectively, were VCMs as gauged by signature ventricular action potential and ionic currents (INa(+)/ICa,L(+)/IKr(+)/IKATP(+)); Ca(2+) transients showed positive chronotropic responses to β-adrenergic stimulation. Our simple, cost-effective protocol required the least amounts of reagents and time compared with others. While the purity and percentage of PSC-VCMs were comparable to a recently published protocol, the present yield and efficiency with a final output of up to 70 hPSC-VCMs per hPSC was up to 5-fold higher and without the need of performing line-specific optimization. These differences were discussed. The results may lead to mass production of hPSC-VCMs in bioreactors.
Background Neuroblastoma (NB) is a common childhood malignant tumor of neural crest (NC) origin with remarkable heterogeneity in outcomes. Amplification of the oncogene MYCN is strongly associated with highly malignant behaviour and poor prognosis. Methods This study aims to use a human embryonic stem cell (hESC)-derived NC model to identify novel downstream effectors of MYCN that can be potentially used as prognostic and/or therapeutic target. Results We show that MYCN-driven NB derived from human neural crest cells (hNCCs) recapitulate the pathological and molecular features of MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma (MNA-NB). By using this platform, we identify a group of 14 surface protein encoding-genes that are associated with MYCN expression level in MNA-NB. Among these genes, high CD55 expression is correlated with poor survival in MNA-NB but not in non-MNA-NB. Furthermore, CD55 promotes tumorigenesis, tumor growth and cancer stemness in MNA-NB cell lines (MNA-NBL) through regulating the JNK pathway. Mechanistically, MYCN binds to both canonical and non-canonical E-boxes on the promoter of CD55 to regulate its transcriptional expression. Finally, neutralizing antibody targeting CD55 significantly attenuates cancer stemness, suppresses tumor growth and improves survival exclusively in MNA-NBL-inoculated mice. Conclusion MYCN shapes CD55 into a novel cancer stem cell regulator which represents a prognostic marker and therapeutic target of MNA-NB. The hESC-derived NC model serves as a valuable platform for investigating NB initiation and progression and developing potential therapeutic targets.
Use of experimentally derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) has led to the development of cell models for differentiation, drug testing and understanding disease pathogenesis. For these models to be informative, reprogrammed cell lines need to be adequately characterized and shown to preserve all of the critical characteristics of pluripotency and differentiation. Here, we report a detailed protocol for the generation of iPSCs from human fibroblasts containing mutations in COL3A1 using a Sendai virus mediated integration-free reprogramming approach. We describe how to characterize the putative iPSCs in vivo and in vitro to ensure potency and differentiation potential. As an example of how these mutations may affect cell surface and extracellular matrix (ECM) interactions, we provide protocols for the differentiation of these cells into smooth muscle cells to illustrate how different cell types may display cell autonomous differences in collagen receptors that may affect their phenotype. These cells, when applied to mechanical model systems (see Chapter 18 by Bose et al.) facilitate an assessment of stiffness and stress-strain relationships useful for understanding how extracellular matrix dysfunction and its interactions with surface proteins contribute to disease processes.
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